Reggie Smith HOF?
Moderators: STLtoday Forum Moderators, Cards Talk Moderators
-
- On probation
- Posts: 7676
- Joined: 30 Aug 2018 19:54 pm
Reggie Smith HOF?
ON THIS DAY... May 22, 1976 - St. Louis' Reggie Smith hit three home runs - two right-handed and one left-handed - and drove in five runs in a 7-6 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. Smith's third homer came with two outs in the ninth and broke a 6-6 tie.
Got me thinking...should we consider Reggie Smith for the HOF?
Pros: 7 All Star, 64.6 fWAR, .855 OPS 137 OPS+, GG, 2,000+ hits, 300+ HR.
Cons: injuries limited his counting numbers. Only 7,033 career ABs limited total HR & RBI.
I remember we stole him from the Red Sox and stupidly gave him to the Dodgers. But he was fun to watch!
Got me thinking...should we consider Reggie Smith for the HOF?
Pros: 7 All Star, 64.6 fWAR, .855 OPS 137 OPS+, GG, 2,000+ hits, 300+ HR.
Cons: injuries limited his counting numbers. Only 7,033 career ABs limited total HR & RBI.
I remember we stole him from the Red Sox and stupidly gave him to the Dodgers. But he was fun to watch!
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
64.5bWAR 16th best all -time for right fielders . His 314 HR's is 9th best all-time by a switch hitter. Very underrated player during his time.
He sure has some numbers that exceed several guys in the Hall of Fame. Right there in top list of ' best players that never made it to the Hall of Fame' .
He sure has some numbers that exceed several guys in the Hall of Fame. Right there in top list of ' best players that never made it to the Hall of Fame' .
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
You wanna put Fred Lynn, Bernie Wiiliams, Paul O'Neill and Brian Giles in too? How about Bob Johnson or Moises Alou???Monsieur De Treville wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:25 am ON THIS DAY... May 22, 1976 - St. Louis' Reggie Smith hit three home runs - two right-handed and one left-handed - and drove in five runs in a 7-6 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. Smith's third homer came with two outs in the ninth and broke a 6-6 tie.
Got me thinking...should we consider Reggie Smith for the HOF?
Pros: 7 All Star, 64.6 fWAR, .855 OPS 137 OPS+, GG, 2,000+ hits, 300+ HR.
Cons: injuries limited his counting numbers. Only 7,033 career ABs limited total HR & RBI.
I remember we stole him from the Red Sox and stupidly gave him to the Dodgers. But he was fun to watch!
-
- Forum User
- Posts: 942
- Joined: 23 May 2024 12:41 pm
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
Not quite
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
I’d like to see both Smith and Dwight Evans enter the HOF in the same class
And -add Lou Whitaker to that group.
And -add Lou Whitaker to that group.
Last edited by The Nard on 22 May 2025 07:56 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
I think Smith is a borderline case, and a very underrated player. As soon as Harold Baines was voted in the flood gates were thrown open. If he's now a barometer for enshrinement then all of those players pass the test.nighthawk wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:46 amYou wanna put Fred Lynn, Bernie Wiiliams, Paul O'Neill and Brian Giles in too? How about Bob Johnson or Moises Alou???Monsieur De Treville wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:25 am ON THIS DAY... May 22, 1976 - St. Louis' Reggie Smith hit three home runs - two right-handed and one left-handed - and drove in five runs in a 7-6 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. Smith's third homer came with two outs in the ninth and broke a 6-6 tie.
Got me thinking...should we consider Reggie Smith for the HOF?
Pros: 7 All Star, 64.6 fWAR, .855 OPS 137 OPS+, GG, 2,000+ hits, 300+ HR.
Cons: injuries limited his counting numbers. Only 7,033 career ABs limited total HR & RBI.
I remember we stole him from the Red Sox and stupidly gave him to the Dodgers. But he was fun to watch!
-
- Forum User
- Posts: 942
- Joined: 23 May 2024 12:41 pm
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
Baines was a mistake and should not be used as a barometer for the HOF IMO.rbirules wrote: ↑22 May 2025 07:52 amI think Smith is a borderline case, and a very underrated player. As soon as Harold Baines was voted in the flood gates were thrown open. If he's now a barometer for enshrinement then all of those players pass the test.nighthawk wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:46 amYou wanna put Fred Lynn, Bernie Wiiliams, Paul O'Neill and Brian Giles in too? How about Bob Johnson or Moises Alou???Monsieur De Treville wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:25 am ON THIS DAY... May 22, 1976 - St. Louis' Reggie Smith hit three home runs - two right-handed and one left-handed - and drove in five runs in a 7-6 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. Smith's third homer came with two outs in the ninth and broke a 6-6 tie.
Got me thinking...should we consider Reggie Smith for the HOF?
Pros: 7 All Star, 64.6 fWAR, .855 OPS 137 OPS+, GG, 2,000+ hits, 300+ HR.
Cons: injuries limited his counting numbers. Only 7,033 career ABs limited total HR & RBI.
I remember we stole him from the Red Sox and stupidly gave him to the Dodgers. But he was fun to watch!
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
+1Basil Shabazz wrote: ↑22 May 2025 08:01 amBaines was a mistake and should not be used as a barometer for the HOF IMO.rbirules wrote: ↑22 May 2025 07:52 amI think Smith is a borderline case, and a very underrated player. As soon as Harold Baines was voted in the flood gates were thrown open. If he's now a barometer for enshrinement then all of those players pass the test.nighthawk wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:46 amYou wanna put Fred Lynn, Bernie Wiiliams, Paul O'Neill and Brian Giles in too? How about Bob Johnson or Moises Alou???Monsieur De Treville wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:25 am ON THIS DAY... May 22, 1976 - St. Louis' Reggie Smith hit three home runs - two right-handed and one left-handed - and drove in five runs in a 7-6 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. Smith's third homer came with two outs in the ninth and broke a 6-6 tie.
Got me thinking...should we consider Reggie Smith for the HOF?
Pros: 7 All Star, 64.6 fWAR, .855 OPS 137 OPS+, GG, 2,000+ hits, 300+ HR.
Cons: injuries limited his counting numbers. Only 7,033 career ABs limited total HR & RBI.
I remember we stole him from the Red Sox and stupidly gave him to the Dodgers. But he was fun to watch!
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
Reggie turned 80 last month and I'm not feeling so hot myself this morning.
The Cards traded Reggie for a terrible half-year of Joe Ferguson, ostensibly because they were afraid of losing him to free-agency. He got something like $200K from the Dodgers for some great years. Poor StL, just couldn't match the big boys in signing elite talent.
The Cards traded Reggie for a terrible half-year of Joe Ferguson, ostensibly because they were afraid of losing him to free-agency. He got something like $200K from the Dodgers for some great years. Poor StL, just couldn't match the big boys in signing elite talent.
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
It is funny how Baines is referred to as a mistake. But yet, he's arguably 134 hits away from being first ballot material.Basil Shabazz wrote: ↑22 May 2025 08:01 amBaines was a mistake and should not be used as a barometer for the HOF IMO.rbirules wrote: ↑22 May 2025 07:52 amI think Smith is a borderline case, and a very underrated player. As soon as Harold Baines was voted in the flood gates were thrown open. If he's now a barometer for enshrinement then all of those players pass the test.nighthawk wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:46 amYou wanna put Fred Lynn, Bernie Wiiliams, Paul O'Neill and Brian Giles in too? How about Bob Johnson or Moises Alou???Monsieur De Treville wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:25 am ON THIS DAY... May 22, 1976 - St. Louis' Reggie Smith hit three home runs - two right-handed and one left-handed - and drove in five runs in a 7-6 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. Smith's third homer came with two outs in the ninth and broke a 6-6 tie.
Got me thinking...should we consider Reggie Smith for the HOF?
Pros: 7 All Star, 64.6 fWAR, .855 OPS 137 OPS+, GG, 2,000+ hits, 300+ HR.
Cons: injuries limited his counting numbers. Only 7,033 career ABs limited total HR & RBI.
I remember we stole him from the Red Sox and stupidly gave him to the Dodgers. But he was fun to watch!
I know I'm in the minority, but I kind of agree with TLR's logic that the loss of time from the two strikes ('81 and '94, some lost time in '95) should be considered when evaluating his stats.
Would these numbers look better: 40 WAR / 500 Doubles /400 HR /3000 hits?
-
- Forum User
- Posts: 942
- Joined: 23 May 2024 12:41 pm
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
I don't take into consideration woulda, coulda, what ifs, etc. If you did that, every borderline player would have a case almost. He was a career majority DH as well.
I think he got voted in by the veterans committee because Edgar Martinez was voted in the year previous. I also do not think Edgar Martinez is a HOFer. Both of these guys were great hitters, but they don't have the counting stats needed to be a HOF DH. Papi would be the only one with those stats who spent the majority of his time as a DH.
I think he got voted in by the veterans committee because Edgar Martinez was voted in the year previous. I also do not think Edgar Martinez is a HOFer. Both of these guys were great hitters, but they don't have the counting stats needed to be a HOF DH. Papi would be the only one with those stats who spent the majority of his time as a DH.
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
He was fun to watch in a Cards uniform. As I recall he was a 2B for the Red Sox when the Cardinals played them in the '67 WS.
-
- Forum User
- Posts: 9510
- Joined: 23 May 2024 12:41 pm
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
No
Hall of Very Good, just like:
Dale Murphy
398 HR
1266 RBI
.265 .346 .469 .815
121 OPS+
2 time NL MVP
7 time all-star
5 Gold Gloves
4 Silver Sluggers
Hall of Very Good, just like:
Dale Murphy
398 HR
1266 RBI
.265 .346 .469 .815
121 OPS+
2 time NL MVP
7 time all-star
5 Gold Gloves
4 Silver Sluggers
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
That's a similar "accumulator" path to the HOF that Brock took, except you have more HRs and a lot less steals. 40 WAR isn't close to HOF worthy, 60 WAR is a rough measuring stick for consideration (which gets Smith in the conversation), IMO.ecleme22 wrote: ↑22 May 2025 08:20 amIt is funny how Baines is referred to as a mistake. But yet, he's arguably 134 hits away from being first ballot material.Basil Shabazz wrote: ↑22 May 2025 08:01 amBaines was a mistake and should not be used as a barometer for the HOF IMO.rbirules wrote: ↑22 May 2025 07:52 amI think Smith is a borderline case, and a very underrated player. As soon as Harold Baines was voted in the flood gates were thrown open. If he's now a barometer for enshrinement then all of those players pass the test.nighthawk wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:46 amYou wanna put Fred Lynn, Bernie Wiiliams, Paul O'Neill and Brian Giles in too? How about Bob Johnson or Moises Alou???Monsieur De Treville wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:25 am ON THIS DAY... May 22, 1976 - St. Louis' Reggie Smith hit three home runs - two right-handed and one left-handed - and drove in five runs in a 7-6 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. Smith's third homer came with two outs in the ninth and broke a 6-6 tie.
Got me thinking...should we consider Reggie Smith for the HOF?
Pros: 7 All Star, 64.6 fWAR, .855 OPS 137 OPS+, GG, 2,000+ hits, 300+ HR.
Cons: injuries limited his counting numbers. Only 7,033 career ABs limited total HR & RBI.
I remember we stole him from the Red Sox and stupidly gave him to the Dodgers. But he was fun to watch!
I know I'm in the minority, but I kind of agree with TLR's logic that the loss of time from the two strikes ('81 and '94, some lost time in '95) should be considered when evaluating his stats.
Would these numbers look better: 40 WAR / 500 Doubles /400 HR /3000 hits?
Before advanced stats using an archaic method like 3000 hits or 500 HRs as automatic thresholds made some sense but they don't stand up to scrutiny now. Baines is one of the worst players in the hall, and given when he was inducted he was probably the worst choice in the history of the hall.
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
Smith's 137 career wRC+ is significantly better than Murphy's 119 wRC+.rockondlouie wrote: ↑22 May 2025 08:39 am No
Hall of Very Good, just like:
Dale Murphy
398 HR
1266 RBI
.265 .346 .469 .815
121 OPS+
2 time NL MVP
7 time all-star
5 Gold Gloves
4 Silver Sluggers
-
- Forum User
- Posts: 9510
- Joined: 23 May 2024 12:41 pm
Re: Reggie Smith HOF?
".. archaic method like 3000 hits or 500 HRs as automatic thresholds"rbirules wrote: ↑22 May 2025 09:01 amThat's a similar "accumulator" path to the HOF that Brock took, except you have more HRs and a lot less steals. 40 WAR isn't close to HOF worthy, 60 WAR is a rough measuring stick for consideration (which gets Smith in the conversation), IMO.ecleme22 wrote: ↑22 May 2025 08:20 amIt is funny how Baines is referred to as a mistake. But yet, he's arguably 134 hits away from being first ballot material.Basil Shabazz wrote: ↑22 May 2025 08:01 amBaines was a mistake and should not be used as a barometer for the HOF IMO.rbirules wrote: ↑22 May 2025 07:52 amI think Smith is a borderline case, and a very underrated player. As soon as Harold Baines was voted in the flood gates were thrown open. If he's now a barometer for enshrinement then all of those players pass the test.nighthawk wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:46 amYou wanna put Fred Lynn, Bernie Wiiliams, Paul O'Neill and Brian Giles in too? How about Bob Johnson or Moises Alou???Monsieur De Treville wrote: ↑22 May 2025 06:25 am ON THIS DAY... May 22, 1976 - St. Louis' Reggie Smith hit three home runs - two right-handed and one left-handed - and drove in five runs in a 7-6 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. Smith's third homer came with two outs in the ninth and broke a 6-6 tie.
Got me thinking...should we consider Reggie Smith for the HOF?
Pros: 7 All Star, 64.6 fWAR, .855 OPS 137 OPS+, GG, 2,000+ hits, 300+ HR.
Cons: injuries limited his counting numbers. Only 7,033 career ABs limited total HR & RBI.
I remember we stole him from the Red Sox and stupidly gave him to the Dodgers. But he was fun to watch!
I know I'm in the minority, but I kind of agree with TLR's logic that the loss of time from the two strikes ('81 and '94, some lost time in '95) should be considered when evaluating his stats.
Would these numbers look better: 40 WAR / 500 Doubles /400 HR /3000 hits?
Before advanced stats using an archaic method like 3000 hits or 500 HRs as automatic thresholds made some sense but they don't stand up to scrutiny now. Baines is one of the worst players in the hall, and given when he was inducted he was probably the worst choice in the history of the hall.

So getting 3,000 hits or hitting 500 HR's is now "archaic" rbi's?
Not hardly
It's an amazing CAREER achievement that only 33 PLAYERS (3,000+ hits) and only 28 PLAYERS (500+ HR's) have ever reached out of 20,887 players who have ever played MLB!
Those are a HELLUVA great achievements and 100% a true measuring stick for election into the Hall of Fame.
"archaic"
C'mon rib's